It must be perfectly adapted to the constraints of the room (placement in the middle or in the back of the room, noise of the ventilator in relation with the position of the viewers, aesthetics and discretion, heat given off, hanging it from the ceiling or placing it on a piece of furniture etc…).
Its brightness must be calculated according to the surface of the cinema screen being lit up (the larger the screen, the more the brightness of the video projector is important), the distance between the projector and the screen as well as the projection format (16:9 or 2.35:1 CinemaScope).
While all the high-end projectors are 3D and fully HD compatible (via electronic glasses preferably), the current trend leans towards ultra HD projection also known as 4K. No less than 4 times the resolution, with a total of 8 million pixels projected on the screen (instead of 2 million for the classic Full HD resolution). Ultra-High Definition 4K is systematically proposed in all our projects. It is in fact indispensable to have the best resolution possible since the projected image is very large as a video projection (on the contrary, having 4K or not on a simple television, is hardly visible for the pixels are far too small in both cases for the naked eye to see the difference). Equipping yourself today with Ultra-HD 4k projection enables to anticipate the future and to not risk having an installation that will be obsolete in a few years.
New native D-ILA 4K molds
Native contrast ratio of 40000:1 to 80000:1
HDR compatible, ultra-realistic images
Image softness gives a very cinematic finish
1800 to 1900 lumens
"Clear Motion Drive 4K60P" technology: reduces the blurry effects